FELLOW-CITIZENS: I will have to ask your silence in order that my voice may reach to
the farthest circumference of this vast throng. I am glad to see you here in your strength.
The people are the Government, men in power only their servants. That is what is meant by Republicanism.
There are two sets of principles, one represented by Gen. Gresham, in this District, and the other by
Michael C. Kerr. The former represents live principles, progressive ideas and loyal proclivities:
the latter the worn-out, defunct, rotten, disloyal Democracy.

To-day I propose to refer to Mr. Kerr's record in connection with the Sons of
Liberty; other questions have been thoroughly discussed, you understand them. The only
real one, after all, is whether rebels or loyal men shall rule this nation.
Kerr has been invited to be present. I came here to meet him. I desire to meet him. I wish he were here
now to hear what I have to say. I sent for him once when I had a few blue-coats at my command,
and he came. He was loath to come then, and he is loath to come to-day. I cannot now force him
to the trial before you, but you can give your verdict and will settle the matter, unless
these disloyal men, whom Kerr represents, again light the torch of war. Then they will be
annihilated.

In 1861 I was one of the soldiers of this land, marching with my knapsack upon my back to
meet with my companions my country's enemies. After two and a-half years of service I was called by
the great Lincoln to perform the duties of Judge Advocate in the army. My business was to
examine records, give legal opinions, and form Military Courts. My department in the East
was Kentucky, East Tenesee and the Army of the Ohio -- in the West, Illinois, Indiana and Michigan.

There came into my office, in Cincinnati, affidavits setting forth that a vast conspiracy existed
in the Northwest, having for its purpose the severing of these States from the East
and forming a separate government; and, failing in that, to join forces with the South and assist it to
achieve
independence. I could not believe that such a thing could be -- it was too horrible, too contrary
to my notion of the patriotism of the people. Yet prudence demanded that I should
probe the matter to the bottom. I did so -- calling scores of witnesses until the monstrous plans
and purposes of the conspirators could no longer be disbelieved
[fold obscures text]
and more than was charged appeared. I then came to Indiana a perfect stranger - knowing nobody --
and not caring for the politics
[fold obscures text]
implicated by the affidavits referred to. Nor, fellow-citizens, did I know anything of them
when I had them arrested, except by name.

I put Dodd, Bowles, Milligan, Humphreys and Horsy upon trial. When Dodd first confronted me
he was brazen and defiant, declaring that no such Order existed as the Sons of Liberty; that there
was an organization for the purpose of egetting Democrats out to the polls, but when he saw Stidger, a shrewd
Government detective, who had worked into his confidence, and the confidence of the Order until he
had been Secretary of it in Kentucky, he dropped his jaw and from that time on he never looked up.
He knew then that he was caught and that the Government he had tried to destroy was in full
possession of all the proof of his damning crime. From that time forward he thought of nothing but escape --
and escape he did.

Other witnesses were put upon the stand, and the Democratic party was deeply involved in the
treasonable schemes of the order. At this point J. J. Bingham, editor, of the State Sentinel newspaper, and Chairman
of the Democratic State Central Committee, began to denounce the whole proceedings as an abolition
electioneering performance. Having, however, the rolls of the order -- on which was Bingham's
name -- I concluded to send for him in a way he could not refuse to obey. He came, and trembled
like Belshazzar at the thought of the consequences which would follow his connection with the order.
He begged to be spared, and said he would tell all and save the country from the horrors of the impending
doom. But I promised him nothing. I had no right to.

I only told him he must take his chances with a great and magnanimous Government. He did,
and was not prosecuted, but put upon the stand as a witness. He disclosed more than Stidger
knew. He who said it was all a lie, seeing that the Government knew enough to convict him,
told all. Now who was and is this Bingham? A Democrat then and a Democrat now. His testimony
stands unimpeached, and is unimpeachable.

Here Gen. Burnett detailed what Bingham disclosed of the plans and purposes of the Order, which has all appeared in our columns
before. He then continued:

Bingham was to call a great Democratic meeting at Indianapolis, and the thousands who were to attend it were
to come with arms in their wagons covered over with straw. At certain signals they were to rush on
the soldiers in the city and capture them. They were then to let loose the 7,000 Confederate
soldiers at Camp Morton, destroy Indianapolis, come down the Jeffersonville road, rendezvous
at New Albany, destroy it and Jeffersonville, cross over to Louisville and destroy it, and unite with the rebel forces coming in
through Cumberland Gap. The Missouri Sons of Liberty were to capture St. Louis, join with
Price, and all the forces uniting, 200,000 strong, with 50,000 released rebels, were to
march to Sherman's rear, crush him between themselves and Johnson, and dictate terms to the United States.
Their scheme failed. And why? It failed because the Government was fortunate enough to find it out
through the faithfulness of its own officers. No Democrat revealed any thing of it until it was with a
view of escaping himself from the consequences of his crime.

I do not say that the eighty thousand in Indiana who had been sworn into the Sons of Liberty, knew
at first of its full purpose, but they were bound in such a manner to their chiefs, by such solemn
and fearful oaths, and were so sedulously educated to hate the Government,
and so thoroughly imbued with the false belief that in
undertaking to coerce rebls, it was assailing the principles of our
Government, that they would have seized, without any question, the arms which were
deposited at convenient places, at the word of command, and marched against the Union
army.

The doctrine of State sovereignty, which placed the State above the General Government,
to which they swore support; the belief they held that the principle of the rebellion
was correct and ought to be sustained; the oath that bound them to obey their leaders and not
reveal the secrets of the order, and the complete frenzy to which they had been cunningly and wickedly
wrought by the false representations of the Government's intentions, conspired to render
it certain that we were on the eve of the most horrible scenes of blood and rapine
which history has recorded, when the Providence of God, who has watched over this
nation from the beginning, enabled the Government to circumvent this awful scheme and prevent its consummation.

Involved in this conspiracy was your man, M.C. Kerr, and I have no hesitation in pronouncing him
a traitor
[fold obscures text]
commit the "over act." In intent, in spirit, in purpose, he was a traitor. I say this, fellow citizens,
dispassionately, and am responsible for what I say here or elsewhere. I KNOW MICHAEL C. KERR
WAS A MEMBER OF THE ORDER, FOR HE CONFESSED IT TO ME HIMSELF TIME AND AGAIN when I had him
in Indianapolis, trembling for his miserable life. I wish he were here now, that I might tell him to his teeth
that he admitted to me -- and never thought of denying it -- making it the basis of all our
conversation, that he was a Son of Liberty.

I believe if the mass of Democracy were here to-day, they would leave him and give their support
to that gallant soldier, General Gresham, who, drawing his sword and flinging the scabbard to the rear,
never turned his back upon the enemy until they lowered their standard in utter defeat.
They could not retain their manhood and vote for such cowards as Kerr, who stayed at home and found
fault with the army's fighting. I propse to examine the evidences of Kerr's being a Son of
Liberty outside of the admission he made to me.

Here the General went into a detailed rehearsal of the testimony of Heffren and Bingham,
and made it so clear that none could fail to understand its force and bearing. He said:

Heffron was the person and political friend of Kerr -- Kerr was not upon trial -- and was only
mentioned incidentally on the trial of another man. What was the motive for him to testify falsely?
Men always have some motive. The writers upon the human mind and will all agree that no man acts
motiveless. I challenge Kerr to show one single motive Heffren could have for involving him -- He must have sworn truthfully -- he could not have sworn otherwise.
I took him, gentlemen, for a witness, because of all the prisoners there he had shown himself
the bravest -- had said the least to me about release. I believed he would tell the truth, as he was not
such a cringing, craven wretch as his fellow prisoners were.

What motive, too, had Bingham for mentioning Kerr. He was a brother Democrat, he had been his friend. Kerr was not charged with anything.
Yet he speaks of him as a member of the Order. Let us look at this matter for a moment.
Kerr not a member of the Order. How then did he know its secrets? One Ghormley says he
told him. If he did then Ghormley was a member himself. This whole thing is summed up in this.
The violation of the oath of secrecy was a shameful death. No less than being quartered and "thrown out of the four
gates of the temple." Nothing but the utmost secresy could insure its success. Yet Kerr has the effrontery
to tell us that he knew about these things and yet was not a member! Gentleman it is preposteous. It don't hang together.
It is all the most absurd nonsense, and nobody believes it.

On the 3d of August, 1864, Kerr went to Indianapolis and met Bingham on the street, and told Bingham all about the scheme, just as Dodd had the
day before related it to him (Bingham.) His first answer to his saluation, "Halloa, Kerr, what brought
you here." was, excitedly, "Do you know anything?"

Bingham replied, "Do you know anything. He then said, "Yes, the devil's to pay in our section of the
State; the people of Washington, Harrison and Floyd counties, and that neighborhood, have got the idea that revolution was
impending," &c. [Treason Trial: page 101-2.]

Kerr said all this, and much more. Now, does any candid man suppose he could have gone from New Albany
to Indianapolis with such details in his possession and not have received it from a member of the Order, and
because he was a member himself? Why did he
[fold obscures few characters]
Had Kerr's subsequent course been such as to confirm the good opinion I formed of him when I met
him in Indianapolis, I should not have been here to-day. I looked upon him as of the great mass of the 80,000 deluded men in the State,
and regarded his willingness to expose and stop the proposed uprising, as either the repugnance of a good man to such a nefarious
business, or the timidity of a man of small courage and caliber.
He was not on trial, and I did not propose to put him upon trial, although he was very much
frightened lest I would, and hence I did not look very carefully into the motives which led
him to attempt the stopping of the mad programme. I now see it plainly. When I heard that he was denying that he had
ever been a Son of Liberty. I was astounded, tried to bring him distinctly to mind and did so. I then
resolved to come at once into the Second District, and confront him to his face
[fold obscures text]
statement that I KNEW HE HAD BEEN A SON OF LIBERTY. I have been here nearly all the week, and have
publicly, in every way, invited him
[fold obscures text]
insuring him a fair hearing -- but he has not done it. If he or any of his friends are in this
crowd, let him or them come upon this stand and I will give him a fair chance.
Michael C. Kerr knows that he was a Son of Liberty and dare not deny it to my face.
I challenge him to deny that he repeatedly in various ways admitted it to be a fact.

The true reason for his exposition of the schemes of the Order now appear. In the light of all this
base denial it becomes luminous. The arrest of Judge Bullitt, and the flight of members
in Kentucky to Canada -- revealted to him that the authorities knew all about the matter. This shows
when we come to examine it, that he went to Indianapolis to save his friends and his own
cowardly hide and neck. He knew pretty well that the Government authorities were
prepared, and probably had the names of the conspirators, and any violence they
might commit would only bring them and him as one of them into trouble. Had this not been
the case why did he not go to the United States authorities at once with his information. No gentlemen,
he was willing, and this was enough to damn him, to help those men escape. He who knows of
a murder about to be committed and does not report it to the proper authorities is guilty of
murder himself. Were Bingham and Dodd the proper authorities to report such a
terrible scheme to? I
didn't look thus deeply into Kerr's connection with the matter at the time of the trial,
for I had no particular reason for pushing my mind out after all
[fold obscures text]
conclusions to which I might have come in regard to the hundreds of insignificant men, like
Kerr, who were before me. All that the Ledger of this city, has said of my remarks on the trial
of the conspirators is correct. But it does not follow that I think so now. I have since learned
that Kerr was a leading politician, and have gotten an insight into his false-heartedness through
his extraordinary denial of his connection with the Sons of Liberty at all.
From this denial alone, which stamps him as a LIAR, I infer that his connection with the order was not
innocent but criminal. Nothing which has been quoted goes to show that I ever, for one moment, doubted
that he was a Son of Liberty. That I never doubt, and that I do not doubt it now.

How cowardly it was in Kerr, Dodd and the other Democrats, who were Sons of Liberty, to desert and
sacrifice poor Bingham and Heffren! But those who could stab the Government which had protected them in its
prosperity could not be expected to stand by their friends in adversity.

In regard to my former opinion of Kerr I may say that I once thought Andrew Johnson true -- fiathful among the faithless, but now I know him
to be faithless among the faithful.

The principle point in Gen. Burnett's argument in regard to Kerr was that he now meanly denied
having been a Son of Liberty, and the meaness and contemptibleness of his deniial showed him to be mean
enough to have been the very meanest kind of Son of Liberty. Gen. Burnett bears the marks
of nobility upon his face. He is above reproach -- too brave to falsify, and too noble to do a man injustice.

HE CALLED UPON GOD TO WITNESS THE TRUTHFULNESS OF HIS STATEMENT THAT KERR HAD TOLD HIM
THAT HE BELONGED TO THE ORDER.

After having convinced every one, who listened to him without prejudice, that Kerr was a Son of Liberty,
he again referred to the treasonableness of the order. He swelt upon the facts that there were
couriers running regularly between the members of the order in the North and those in the South,
that Barrett, a Confederate officer, had at Chicago $2,000,000 of money, captured from a
Federal paymaster, which was authorized to be placed in the hands of the Sons of Liberty, for the purpose
of paying a part of the expenses of the new government; that Confederate officers met in
Indianapolis, and that ten men had been assassinate Governor Morton. He drew a vivid picture
of the devastation, rapine and murder, which would have followed the turning
loose upon the State the pack of "Confederate hell-hounds" confied at Camp Morton. Democratic houses
had been signalled so as to escape by placing in some of them a Star, and in some,
portraits of John Morgan. And we may add ourselves that nothing in the history of the world is
more revolting and devilish than this cold-blooded plan of home traitors, to have our families
slain, and many of them worse
[fold obscures text]
hating, revengeful rebels whom they proposed to let loose.

Coming back to Kerr, General Burnett said:

I desire to impress you more fully, if I can, with the fact that Kerr must have been a Son
of Liberty to have known what he did. In all the conspiracy trials in which I was Judge
Advocate, including the trial of the assassins of Mr. Lincoln, I examined and conversed with not less
than fifteen hundred persons who had been connected with secret orders, and never did I learn any of their
secrets except from members. No outsider ever did or ever could give me information.
Yet Kerr, more remarkable than all other men, had found out the greatest and most
important secret that ought to be kept, and that, too,
in all its details! Fellow-citizens, I know you are not so simple as to
believe any such stuff. Kerr must have been a member. He was a member.
If he was not, let him come here and tell me, if he dare, that he did not ADMIT IT TO ME.
What sort of a man is he to beat General Gresham with, a man and a General without reproach,
without a stain upon his veracity, but on the other hand, covered all over with glory,
bearing a wound upon his person. For shame! For shame! you stay-at-home Democrats, for
not recognizing your defender, and assisting in crowning him with honors.

Kerr probably has availed himself of a quibble in order to escape the odium of belonging
to the Order of the Sons of Liberty. In July Vailandigham changed the name of the Order
from American Knights to that of Sons of Liberty. Now Heffren swore that Kerr joined on the
night of March 8, Hence, although the Order was substantially the same under all its various
names, he and his affidavit masters, who were probably as "deep in the mud as he was in the mire,"
seek to escape through the fact that they did in March belong to an Order, but it was not the Sons of Liberty
but the Order of American Knights. This is a man ly dodge indeed, but it does not help the matter,
for Vallandigham make some changes in it for the better, when he made it the Sons of Liberty. Kerr
belonged to the most odious form of the Order which was ever in existence. Considerable has been
said about his taking the "Neophyte's lesson." Let me read you a little of that.
Here the General reads the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 10th sections of the lesson, all of which contain the most
treasonable doctrine. We give only the 10th:

"Whenever the officials, to whom the people have entrusted the powers of the Government, shall
refuse to administer it in strict accordance with its Constitution, and shall assume and exercise power
and authority not delegated, it is the inherent right and imperative duty of the people to resist
such officials; and, if need be, expel them by force of arms. Such resistance is not revolution."

To this doctrine Kerr subscribed. The only difference between him and the Southern rebels was that
they were brave enough to fight for their principles, while he was too COWARDLY. Our government
is composed of States, but they are

"Many as the billows, one as the sea," ripples upon the surce, all unity and calm below. Now who will
vote for Kerr, who swore to subvert this doctrine?
[Nobody].

The General now passed from the consideration of Kerr to a view of the whole field, and was
exceedingly forcible and eloquent. He said:

There is little now, fellow-citizens, left to do but to shout victory. Maine has spoken.
Vermont has spoken. The New York Herald has come back to the support of the policy of Congress. Raymond, of the Times, has
done the same thing -- and they do say the President is about to leave
the Johnson party. [Great laughter.]

Johnson has kept one pledge, that is to make treason odious. In his own person it is more odious
than ever it was before. He has betrayed everbody, even the negroes, and nobody believes him.
I hope he wont come back to us. We've had enough of him.

After telling some very appropriate anecdotes which set the audience
into roars of laughter. General Burnett closed thus:

Bury, my countrymen, with your white ballots written all over with the purity of loyalty -- like
snow-flakes falling upon the ground the loathsome treason which you began kill out in 1860, and gave
heavy blows to in 1865. Send the glorious Gresham to Congress from this district and keep
all peace sneaks at home or where they can do no harm. Keep the old crew on board the Ship
of State and it will land us all safely in on the shore of peace, prosperity and liberty.
I take you for your profound attention. [Tremendous cheers].

[Original broadsheet of speech housed in the Ohio State Archives in
Indianapolis]

CORRESPONDENCE WITH JUDGE ADVOCATE H. L. BURNETT.

Commerical Office, New Albany, October 2, 1866.

General H. L. Burnett,

DEAR SIR: Your position as Judge Advocate during the celebrated treason trials at Indianapolis in 1864
gave you peculiar means for ascertaining the objects, membership and workings of the Order
generally known as the Sons of Liberty. Will you do me the favor to state if Michael C. Kerr
was a member of that Order, and whatever else you iknow with reference to his connection
with it? For such information, in as much detail as possible, I and the loyal men of this District will be under
great obligations. We want simply the facts.

Very truly yours,
J. P. LUSE,
Editor Commercial

Louisville Hotel, Oct. 2, 1866.

James P. Luse, Esq., Editor New Albany Commercial,

SIR: To your communication of this day I reply: While the Treason Trials were progressing
at Indianapolis, in the fall of 1864, I sent for Mr. Kerr, as I did for many members of the order,
with the object of either putting him on trial or using him as a witness, and also for the purpose
of questioning him as to the purposes and objects of the order of the sons of Liberty, of which the rolls,
captured at Dodd's office and the residence of other witnesses, had shown that he was a member.
In that interview he unhesitatingly admitted that he was a member of the order. I saw him
several times after and conversed with him upon the subject of his membership. He never
hesitated or equivocated upon the subject, but always frankly admitted that he was advised
in an interview with Dodd and others, of the contemplated uprising of the 17th of September,
1864, and was willing, as he stated to me, if put upon the stand, to testify to those facts.

The ultimate purpose of the Order, in my judgment and that of all the officers engaged in the
investigation, was as treasonable and more damnable than the rebellion itself.